Next Gen SAFE-T P25 UPGRADE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Next Gen SAFE-T P25 UPGRADE. Integrated Public Safety Commission. Current Status - Capacity. Statewide 800 MHz Communications System Designed in 2000, limited to 64,000 IDs At system capacity – no room for additional users

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Manufacturing end dates occurred in 2013, and vendor contracted support will run out at the end of 2017. This will render the system "not" upgradeable and repairable only as long as end of production parts are available.

IPSC and the Indiana Office of Budget and Management (OMB) conducted a very detailed review, analysis and procurement process

Several state agencies, including the Indiana Department of Homeland Security, Indiana Criminal Justice Institute, and the Indiana Department of Health, were intimately involved. Unprecedented cooperation & partnerships will benefit public safety professionals for decades to come.

The P25 system is based on the same principles that drove the success of the current statewide system – voluntary participation, no user fees, and partnerships that allow for maximum savings and statewide interoperability.

Moving from 4 Zones on the 4.1 system to 2 Zones on the P25 system. New Cores will be located at Indianapolis and Bloomington. Cores will be the first items purchased. New locations will require the re-routing of many T-1’s.

All radios within the build-out ISP District will need to be upgraded and re-programmed before any of the sites can be upgraded. Some 60,000 radios to be touched.

Upgrades to Motorola radios are included in the migration. The upgrades are not being funded by the State.

Some radios are analog only and not capable of being upgraded to P25. Particularly, Motorola MTS 2000, MCS 2000, Spectra, MTX series, and LTX series.

Substantial discounts will be available for select Motorola radios for the period of the 2 year build-out only. The claimed 52% discount is from the List price, not the QPA price. Motorola dealers will provide pricing.

Other vendor radios can be used on the system, but they must meet the requirements of the Compliance Assessment Program and must be secured with a hardware system key. Info about the CAP is available at http://www.pscr.gov/outreach/safecom/p25_cap/p25_cap_docs.php

The upgrade will be a fork-lift replacement of equipment at each site. The 4.1 and P25 systems will not be run in parallel. That means that as the upgrade progresses across the State, users will either be on the 4.1 system or the P25 system. Dual programming will be necessary

Depending on the number of sites, it will take several weeks for each Region to be completed

In the near term, wireless broadband will complement Land Mobile Radio (LMR), not replace it. Wireless broadband does not currently meet the requirements for emergency response voice communications, therefore LMR will be around for years.

Investments in LMR will continue to be necessary now and well into the future. It will still be years before emergency responders can rely on broadband technologies for voice communications.

Phase 1: planning, consulting, and development activities in preparation for consultations with FirstNet, including strategy and timeline development, meetings, governance planning, and outreach and education efforts

Phase 2: Data collection activities and continuation of all of the approved first phase activities (e.g., planning, governance, outreach, education). Consultation with FirstNet

State Plan presented to governor, who will have 90 days to decide whether or not to participate in the FirstNet network (Opt-In/Opt-Out)

Opting out means the federal government won’t build the network. States that opt out will have 180 days to submit a plan of their own to the FCC and NTIA and will be expected to pay for at least 20 percent of the cost